Even nonbelievers may become enraged at news that a gravesite somewhere has been desecrated.
The chief, enraged by their reappearance, then expelled the entire family.
For all its advantages of clarity, though, such a view enraged the sensibilities of a later generation of liberals.
The king, enraged, threatened to destroy the possessions of the objecting monks.
Perhaps this was out of sympathy for her older daughter, who was enraged by the engagement (although she happily married later).
Two features of the work enraged the royalists above all.
She must needle, cajole, and sometimes enrage her fellow citizens to overcome their acquiescence and recover their moral equanimity.
We know from neuroanatomical research that one can easily, and at will, enrage a cat by electrically stimulating its amygdala.